Search This Blog

Sunday, December 27, 2020

A Blown Defensive Assignment & Dumb Shot Make The C's Lose Their First Road Game Of '20-'21

 

    It's amazing how often a 48-minute NBA game (assuming that it's decided in regulation) can come down to a few plays here or there that mean the difference between winning or losing. The Celtics (1-2 overall, 0-1 away) found themselves on the wrong end of a 108-107 loss tonight to the unbeaten Pacers (3-0 overall, 2-0 home) at Bankers Life Fieldhouse. Instead of picking up a very satisfying win in their first road game of the season, Boston basically blew it with a pair of fatal mistakes on both ends of the floor. Indiana was nursing a one-point lead when point guard Marcus Smart (11 points, 6 assists, 2 steals) stole the ball from small forward T.J. Warren (17 points, 5 rebounds) on an inbounds pass and went in for a layup that put the C's up 107-106 with 11.8 seconds left. If you felt like that was way too much time left on the clock for the Pacers, your worst fears soon came true.
    On their next offensive possession, Indiana's best player-power forward Domantas Sabonis (19 points, 10 rebounds, 5 assists)-drove to the basket and made a layup while getting fouled. Somehow Celtics power forward Grant Williams (6 points, 4 rebounds) and center Robert Williams (12 points, 4 steals, 2 blocks) screwed up the defensive switch on Sabonis which gave him a wide-open lane to the hoop. He missed the free throw and Robert Williams grabbed the rebound which gave Boston another chance to win it. With eight seconds left (!), the best that head coach Brad Stevens could come up with was an ill-advised three-pointer attempted by power forward Jayson Tatum (team-high 25 points, 11 rebounds, 5 assists) that clanked harmlessly off the rim. Obviously, his luck from Wednesday's bank-shot three against the Bucks (1-2) was nowhere to be found. There's not much in the NBA that I hate more than that hero shot in those type of situations: go to the basket and try to draw contact or get a better shot for yourself or heaven forbid a teammate. Ugh, those are the worst and they are only infecting lower levels of basketball (college, high school, AAU, etc) with that crap.
    Besides those two rough sequences, this was a contest that Boston honestly should have won. They outscored Indiana in three of the four quarters (not the 3rd of course), hit two more three-pointers (9-7) and seven more free throws (18-11) while also grabbing three more rebounds (40-37) and making two more steals (13-11). The only place where the Pacers really excelled was in the paint as they outscored the Celtics by 20 points (62-42) near the basket. 
   Playing in the second night of a back-to-back, the home team understandably got off to a very slow start but the fresher Celtics weren't really able to take advantage as they only led 23-19 after the first frame and 55-49 at halftime. The Pacers predictably woke up coming out of the break, hitting the Celts with a 16-2 run that left the C's dazed. As bad as they were in the third quarter (getting blitzed 39-28), Boston locked down Indiana in the fourth quarter (24-20) except when it mattered most. 
    After dropping 33 and 27 points in his first two games, small forward Jaylen Brown (18 points, 2 steals) was held more in check by Indiana. There were many frustrating aspects of this winnable game for the Celts but another angle is that they are unlikely to have many better collective performances from their bench this season: they outscored Indiana's 42-3 led by rookie point guard Payton Pritchard (13 points, 2 steals) who shot a perfect five-for-five from the field including three-for-three on three-pointers. The Pacers only played eight guys but they all made some type of contribution to the victory: point guard Malcolm Brogdon (25 points, 5 rebounds, 5 assists, 2 steals) was surprisingly their leading scorer, center Myles Turner (10 points, 7 rebounds, 5 blocks, 2 steals)-who should be a Celtic if GM Danny Ainge had pulled the trigger on the widely reported trade offer for Gordon Hayward-was a defensive force while small forward Doug McDermott (16 points) and shooting guard Justin Holiday (13 points) were both solid off the bench.
    These teams will no doubt start to hate each other in due time since they meet again on Tuesday night (7, NBC Sports Boston) in Indianapolis. Indiana's second best player-shooting guard Victor Oladipo-sat out tonight to rest his knee-and he scored 22 points in both of their previous games this season so you figure that if he suits up, the Pacers will be even harder to beat. If Stevens ever wants to show his face in his beloved home state, he has to return to Boston with a win from this brief return to his roots. As I predicted, Indiana is right at their level but still, a sweep would be simply unacceptable if they have any intention of being above average this season. Just find a way guys, 2-2 would look a whole lot better than sporting a yucky 1-3 record.

No comments: